Prevalence and correlates of perinatal depression
Manchester Academic Health Science Centre · University of Manchester · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Seven databases were searched from inception until April 2022. Full-text screening and data extraction were performed independently by two researchers and the AMSTAR tool was used to assess the methodological quality.
128 systematic reviews were included in the analysis. Mean overall prevalence of perinatal depression, antenatal depression and postnatal depression was 26.3%, 28.5% and 27.6%, respectively. Mean prevalence was significantly higher (27.4%; SD = 12.6) in studies using self-reported measures compared with structured interviews (17.0%, SD = 4.5; d = 1.0) and among potentially vulnerable populations (32.5%; SD = 16.7, e.g. HIV-infected African women) compared to the general population (24.5%; SD = 8.1; d = 0.6). Personal history of mental illness, experiencing stressful life events, lack of social support, lifetime history of abuse, marital conflicts, maternity blues, child care stress, chronic physical health conditions, preeclampsia, gestational diabetes mellitus, being exposed to second-hand smoke and sleep disturbance were among the major correlates of perinatal depression.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 54.69
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 66
Authors
3- KAKhalood Al-AbriCorresponding
Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Sultan Qaboos University
- DEDawn Edge
Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust, University of Manchester
- CJChristopher J. Armitage
Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, University of Manchester, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, NIHR Manchester Biomedical Research Centre
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Depression (economics)
- Antenatal depression
- Population
- Systematic review
- Gestational diabetes
- Marital status
- Psychiatry